Sprinter Ashley Kelly Volunteers At Chicago Marathon, NY Next

Ashley Kelly won the Big 10
Conference Indoor 400m title in 2011 and also won All America Honors in the
event outdoors that same year. PHOTO:
Dean "The Sportsman" Greenaway

When Kenyans Dickson Chumba and Florence Kiplagat were
sweeping to Chicago Marathon victories on Sunday, British Virgin Islands
sprinter Ashley Kelly was right there watching them zipping by just before the
halfway point in the 26.2 miles race.

Kelly, a 400m All American sprinter for Illinois, was glad
to return home for a brief stint after moving to New York, where she's doing a
community and marketing internship with Radagen Sports Marketing company.

Kelly said she got the connection via a combination of being
in class, volunteering with different guest lecturers for different things,
networking and applying for an internship. While she wasn't able to fulfill that aspect of the internship,
she was speaking with someone affiliated with the New York Marathon and said
they were sending a small group to Chicago and that's how she got in.

"I was
volunteering for the upcoming New York Marathon and then I got picked to shadow
in the Chicago Marathon, to kind of piggy back on what they were doing and
bring it back to the New York Marathon," she explained. "I was glad I got to
go. I haven't been in Chicago in the two years since I moved. The people were
really nice and it was hectic the first day, as I worked the help expo on
Friday and Saturday and the planning stages getting everything organized. There
were lots of people who thought they were head of things, too many leaders, but
shortly after, everything began flowing. But it was a cool experience."

Kelly said she learnt how to handle different personalities,
crowds and the behind the scenes aspects of events. She said she's glad she didn't have to work the main event
because that meant getting up at 4:30 a.m., working the whole day and cleaning
up after the event.

"At the help expo, I was at the athletes packet pick up and
helped with the T-shirts and also worked with all the signage that was being
set up," she said. "I will be in the same capacity in the New York Marathon,
helping plan in the beginning stages, not working the event, so I keep getting
out of the grit work. I'm just in the planning and helping people market
different things and coordinating with the different sponsors."

During the race she was at the 12 mile mark and saw the
runners zipping by. "That's the point where people were getting over the hump
and you look at their faces and it looked just dreadful and I was like 'what
got you into this,'" she said. "I saw the Kenyans go by with was intense because they were running miles
faster that I've ever run one mile, they are going through miles in 4:40, I don't
know how they do it."

Her internship with Radagen Sports Marketing, where they
handle off the field events and branding, not contract negotiating, includes
such clients as Boston Red Sox's David Ortiz, New York Rangers' Ryan McDonaugh,
New York Jets' Muhammed Wilkerson and several hockey players. "The experience
is good so far as I've been working with the committee events related to the
foundation the athletes we represent are connected with, as well as sponsorship
and soliciting business planners," she explained. "I have been working on
sponsorship for David Ortiz's celebrity Golf event in December in the Dominican
Republic."

As an athlete, being exposed to this side of things Kelly
said its lot of grit work. She aid as competitors, they only see the end result
but don't know how things get in place. "There's a lot of work involved in getting
through those stages," she noted. "I'm
learning a lot about the athlete side, marketing and branding, I'm learning athletes
can be very difficult to work with. I guess because it's a sense of
entitlement, but it can be irritating at some points. So I'm trying to see what
I don't like in the field, this is helping me see that part and what I'm good
at. I'm good at coordinating sponsors and community outreach events."